corn craft: a project by gallery fumi and studio too good

wheat table by raw-edges design studio, 2009
dry wheat, wood, pegboard
image © designboom
corn craft marks the first collaboration between gallery fumi and studio toogood.
a project which is on show as part of london design week 09, corn craft draws on
traditional folk culture. bringing together art and design, the result is a contemporary
installation based around the sustainable and natural material of corn. each of the designers
have taken the common material, each engaging with the corn in completely different way.
one-off pieces by nacho carbonell, raw edges design studio, max lamb, gemma holt
and rowan mersh form the whole of the show.

wooden frames and peg board form the support for the shafts of wheat
image © designboom
the wheat table by raw-edges design studio is a domesticated indoor field which is made
of dry wheat which has been 'planted' squarely inside overlapping wooden frames.
dishes are put on top of the wheat as if they were floating.

approximately 12, 000 shafts of wheat were used to construct the table
image © designboom

the wheat is 'planted' into holes in the peg board, allowing them to stay upright
image © designboom

detail of how the wheat stays planted
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the result is a table which looks like a field of wheat
image © designboom

the density of the wheat creates a surface in which bowls and plates can be placed
image © designboom

plates nestle within the wheat shafts, as if to be floating upon a field of wheat
image © designboom

various color samples from nacho carbonell's experimentation with corn
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nacho carbonell's installation crop is intended to stimulate a space inside a corn field.
the process of his design involved breaking down the grains into a fine powder so that
he could mix them with an adhesive to form the beginnings of a malleable material.
a variety of methods were used to create a powder - from traditional manual farm apparatus,
to electronic kitchen blenders. a traditional manual juicer was used to extract the corn's pigments,
which eventually dissolved in the adhesive and later mixed with powder grain.
a variety of pigments for coloring the grain were tested. those which were most successful
were the ones derived from natural sources such as grass and the laves of the corn plant.
the motivation behind nacho's research was to investigate the many colors and textures
the corn grain could produce.

left sample: 40g wheat / 40 g yellow corn / 12g beatroot juice
right sample: pure black corn
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left sample: yellow corn and ink
right sample: 80g ground corn / 89 g corn plant juice
image © designboom

crop by nacho carbonell, 2009
corn resin, corn juice, ground corn, barley, wheat, oats, cornflakes, steel rod reinforcements
image © designboom
carbonell's installation consists of several pieces which explore the colors,
movement
and lushness of corn. the pieces were built using materials found
in a field.

image courtesy of tom mannion

each individual piece of crop has its own intimate space
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detail of the texture
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the paste of corn resin, ground corn and various grains has been pushed trough a wire mesh to get the desired forms
image © designboom

a color and texture sample of the processed corn
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demonstrating how the new material can be applied by using it to make a chair
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detail of the chair's texture
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untitled by rowan mersh, 2009
bearded wheat, shet, barley, oats
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mersh is a textile designer and he has installed a sight specific installation of hanging wheat
which is meant to encapsulate the spirit of rural england's rolling hills. over 40,000 individual
pieces of corn, strung onto mono-filament line have been used in the development of the installation.

various shades and types of grains were used
image © designboom

grains which are bent have not been treated by an oven
image © designboom

alpha glass by max lamb and gemma holt for lobmeyr
glass
image courtesy of tom mannion
alpha is a mouth-blown glass by max lamb and gemma holt for lobmeyr craftsmen.
the glass is placed on a tiny stone wheel, in which a skillful act of a nudge is placed upon
the glass' surface, creating a barley shaped engraving, the grain of the stone like fibres
of a barley husk.

alpha glass
image © designboom

detail of the barley shaped engraving
image courtesy of tom mannion

wheat shafts which remain straight are those whose moisture has been extracted via an oven
image © designboom

general view
image © designboom

exhibition view
image © designboom

image courtesy of tom mannion
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